It's a little known fact that in addition to being a retired high ranking member of the Catholic Church, John Ratzenberger discovered that the umbilical cord is 90% potassium, and that common dust is 75% human skin.

Well, duh, he was "Stinky the Penguin" in Mr. Popper's Penguins. So that right there would put him in the top ten.

And if you RTFA, you'll see that his actual total is even higher, because these figures don't include the receipts from such films as The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969) and How to Frame a Fig (1971).

Ambivalence:Bathia_Mapes: RexTalionis: Frank Welker has been in everything. The man is a voice-over legend.

Yep, and it saddens me that a lot of people don't know who he is.

Still, it's kind of a neat honor to be the most famous man no one has ever heard of.

I'd love to be in that position. Enjoy a normal life, then, when somebody asks what your work is like, and you say "they're grrrrr-eat!" and holy farking shiat someone suddenly discovered who this Thurl Ravenscroft guy is.

If I was the movie trailer guy I couldn't help but use that to mess with people. Ordering pizza "in a world, where I have the munchies, one man stands tall. A pizza delivery guy takes on the 30 minute or less challenge." And so forth.

People know Frank Welker... they just don't know his name. Every animal with a personality in every cartoon from the 80s on was him. He played Uni in D&D. He played Abu in Alladin. He played Bandit in Johnny Quest. He's not a voice guy, he's honestly a sound guy. He's like the guy in Police Academy, but lesser known, more talented, and much friendlier.

Fano:If I was the movie trailer guy I couldn't help but use that to mess with people. Ordering pizza "in a world, where I have the munchies, one man stands tall. A pizza delivery guy takes on the 30 minute or less challenge." And so forth.

*sigh* I miss Don LaFontaine. Movie trailers just aren't the same since he died.